I am using JavaScript Date object to convert milliseconds into a readable minutes:seconds
formatted string. I need that to create a timer for a custom video player, where my JS interface receives the video duration info as a millisecond value.
It’s been a fairly trivial task, before I decided to support a possibility of having a video longer than 59 minutes. And then I encountered this problem: when I submit a millisecond value to the new Date object’s constructor, and then call getHours()
, it will return something even if the number of milliseconds stands for a period of time less than an hour. The easiest way to see this in action is to feed it, say, 0.
I‘d expect it to return 0, but it always returns 12 (13 in Opera, which makes it even more weird). Is this a normal behaviour or is it a bug? Either way, how do I reliably detect whether my millisecond value is limited to just minutes and seconds or also includes hours?
Thanks.
UPD:
I‘ve tested it in Chrome 15 and Firefox 7 on OSX: same result as per the screenshot above. I cannot figure out how to use Opera Dragonfly console, but from what I see same thing happens in Opera, just with the value of 13 for getHours()
.
Date
constructor here.new Date( n )
returns aDate
object with the date set to January 1st 1970 +n
milliseconds, which is certainly not what you want...